Albericus Belgioiosiae Auroborus
Massimo De Carlo gallery is pleased to present, Albericus Belgioiosiae Auroborus, a new exhibition by Luigi Ontani.
Luigi Ontani has described his practice as "the adventure I live as a person of art”, where art and life are inseparable, becoming a journey of pursuing and exploring one’s identity against historical canons. In his extensive career the eclectic artist has traversed different media, using objects, hand-colored photographs, papier mâché, ceramic sculptures, slide projections and performances to explore fictional re-creations of identity and regression into childhood and memory. Each body of work the artist has created is united through the usage of himself, as the centre point to explore a multitude of personae, embodying himself as his favourite heroes from mythology, fairy tales, history, and art history.
For Albericus Belgioiosiae Auroborus, Ontani has created a narrative that embodies the history and the architecture of Palazzo Belgioioso, the prestigious palace housing the gallery, completed in 1787 by architect Francesco Piermarini, and that was renowned for being the beating heart of the life of the wealthy and cultured Milanese of the time. The interaction between the space and the artist is strongly enthused by the characters and the events that have shaped the rich history of the building and that become tangible in the form of eight large ceramic masks, created by Ontani specifically for the occasion. Through each work the artist creates a narrative that continues and strengthens his exploration of individual identity, here through symbolism and heraldry.
Each mask on display creates a dialogue between historical symbols and mystical Oriental suggestions, key elements of the poetics of Ontani’s practice. Adorned with anthropomorphic details, like eyes and nose, this mannerist type of work confers to each emblem in the exhibition its own stylistic and symbolic importance, powerfully infused with mythological and oneiric details.
PalmAltrove, the golden star shaped sculpture at the centre of the second exhibition room, summarizes the union between Indian symbolism and the history of the West: the allegorical mouth, whose shape is inspired by the cosmic gardens of the Maharaja Jai Singh observatories in Delhi and Jaipur, gives life to a miniature of the leaning Tower of Pisa through the alchemy of the breath; the Etra d'ESTEtica mask at the entrance is dedicated to the art of painting, adorned with a long tapered brush and small mythological figures that at first glance appear as splashes of colour on a golden palette.
Using the same stylistic cipher and sense of humor, the artist has revisited the ancient emblem of the Belgioioso family, once symbol of the historical prestige of the family and present in the family's herald visible in the centre of the gallery ceiling and in the ouroboros dedicated to Alberico di Belgioioso, the nobleman and Milanese aesthete who commissioned the construction of the building in the 18th century.
With chronology and literature as the main driving forces behind the exhibition, a key reference point for Ontani is avant-garde writer Giorgio Manganelli’s book Discorso dell’ombra e dello stemma. As Manganelli observes, “to be crazy is the mother of art and literature”: Luigi Ontani restores the purity and innocence of his iconographic research in a kaleidoscope of images and complex references, roots of conceptual thought. Albericus Belgioiosae Auroborus is a sculptural exploration of identity that combines heraldic iconography with the hypertrophic imagination of the artist.
The Artist
Luigi Ontani (b. 1943, Vergato, Bologna) is one of the most influential and remarkable Italian artists working today. Ontani’s idiosyncratic work represents a radical counterposition to that adopted by Arte Povera in the years he came to prominence.
His photographs, drawings, installations, performances and tableaux vivants relate to an extremely rich western and eastern iconographical tradition. He is often the subject of his own work, wearing the clothing of mythical figures from history, religion or literature, drawing from very diverse sources, both near and distant in time.
Ontani began his career in the 1970s and was known for his tableau vivants: photographed and videotaped performances in which he presented himself in a variety of ways—from Pinocchio to Dante, Saint Sebastian to Baccus—personifying historic, mythological, literary and popular themes. Ontani expressed himself through the use of diverse techniques throughtout his career: from his “oggetti pleonastici” made in plaster, to the “stanza delle similitudini,” made with objects cut in corrugated fiberboard. These techniques are not ends in themselves but are occasions to experiment and formulate variations of the subjects that interest the artist the most: a “transhistoric” travel through myth, the mask, the symbol and iconographic representation.
His work has been presented in important national and international exhibitions and in numerous personal exhibitions: Bologna, Galleria d’arte moderna, 1990; Frankfurt, Frankfurter Kunstverein, 1996; Rome, Acquario Romano, 2000; New York, PS 1 Contemporary art center, 2001; Gent, SMAK, 2003-04; Faenza, International Ceramics Museum, 2006; Rome, Lorcan O’Neill Gallery, 2007-08; Naples, Capodimonte Museum, 2010; Bern, Kunsthalle, 2012; Rome, Hendrik Christian Museum Andersen, 2014; Rome, Academy of San Luca (2017). Ontani has also participated in various editions of the Venice Biennale (1978, 1986, 1995).